WizarDru
Adventurer
LordVyreth said:Wow, that was fast! I appreciate your effort; that should be very helpful. I might have to go over it to see if there's anyone missing or that I would like more information, but it looks pretty complete. The only name that comes to name so far is the Khrel Hr’dad.
It's pretty amusing to me the way the Circle of Eight is so margianalized in your campaign. They sort of jumped from "awe-inspiring heroes" to "don't even get invited to the meetings" somewhere mid-campaign. I actually half-expected them to have been wiped out in the Githyanki Incursion at this point.![]()
Well, when they were 2nd level characters, they had already met two members of the Circle of Eight...one was odd and the other arrogant. The others they eventually met were already tainted by Mordankainen's first impression. Originally, the Circle consisted of 17-20th level wizards. Post-ELH, a few got a boost to Epic Levels. Those characters survive. One thing I try to strive for is the impression that the world is bigger than just the party's actions; other people are up to their own agendas and plans, which may not always make sense. Some things develop in complete separation of the party's involvement or because of their presence/absence from particular events.
In some cases, NPCs take up the slack; the party can't defend the whole Flanaess. Folks like Melf, Aran'gel and the Celenian defend against the forces of Turrosh Mak, for example. The party has known of the Mak's aggresion since prior to the Forge of Fury...but then they weren't capable of dealing with the problem, and now they'd be wasting their time unless they did a full-on assualt against the Mak's assembled war machine. And so it goes.
The Circle have become basically a drastically weakend power-group. However, they were never on the ins with the Scaled Council, since they are primarily agents of neutrality...very aggresive agents of neutrality, in fact. Mordankanien is capable of evil acts, if it maintains his prescious balance. The party most likely would dislike him more than some of their enemies, if they don't already. Case in point: when the party freed Gelban, they held the ancient Blue dragon with respect; he was direct, to the point and neither asked nor offered quarter. He was an adversary with no hidden agenda; "Kill me if you can!" Mordankanein, on the other hand, is all about hidden plots and such things...so Scorch would probably slap him and call him Susan, if given half a chance.

Oh, and the post of Jonathan? It's been filled.